Conservative Not Republican: Those of us who grew up in the south…perhaps, especially those like myself, who came of age during the era of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Allman Brothers, Marshall Tucker, 38 Special, Charlie Daniels, Wet Willie, and many others…I think we experienced the most authentic vibe the culture could offer…and what a time it was.
Southern Rock: An Introduction To The Genre And Its Key Bands
Any introduction to southern rock and its key bands must start with the blues. The genre has one big foot firmly in the blues, and another – maybe slightly smaller – foot in country music. It all comes together in a unique style that has a bit of Elvis Presley boogie, Jerry Lee Lewis attitude, Muddy Waters skill, and Buddy Guy swing while traveling a road entirely its own. The spiritual home of this music is Macon, Georgia, where Phil Walden founded Capricorn Records. The label’s artist roster read like a who’s who of Southern Rock: There was Wet Willie, Grinderswitch, Elvin Bishop, The Marshall Tucker Band, and, of course, The Allman Brothers Band. Since those heady days, the genre has grown to encompass the entire region and beyond. In this introduction to southern rock bands and artists, we offer a pathway into the genre for those looking to get acquainted. – Richard Havers
Allman Brothers Band
If you’re looking for the beginnings of Southern Rock, there may be no better place to start than the Allman Brothers. Formed in Jacksonville, Florida by the brothers Allman, they were the catalyst for numerous other bands to introduce their own southern-ness to rock. There’s Duane Allman and his sinuous slide guitar solos, brother Gregg Allman hunched over his Hammond B3 pounding out the atmosphere as well as handling most of the vocals, and there’s Dickey Betts whose rippling counterpoint guitar offers an amazing alternative to Duane. The 1973 album Brothers and Sisters topped the charts in America and broke the band in many countries around the world. And, for many, their live album At Fillmore East is one of rock’s definitive concert recordings. It was also the last complete recording on which Duane Allman played, as he was killed in a motorcycle accident in October 1971. – Richard Havers
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Ronnie Van Zant, Allen Collins, and Gary Rossington formed a band in 1964 and, by 1970, had finally settled on the name of a teacher from Rossington’s school – Leonard Skinner. The group’s debut album under that name, Pronounced ‘Lĕh-‘nérd ‘Skin-‘nérd came out three years later. It featured “Free Bird” and “Simple Man,” two of the biggest Southern rock songs ever put to tape. While the Allman Brothers had a hint of jazz about them, Lynyrd Skynyrd were the epitome of a driving, bluesy hard rock band. This sometimes prevented people from appreciating just what a fine songwriter Ronnie Van Zant was. In four short years, however, the group put together an incredible Southern rock catalogue including eternal hits like “Sweet Home Alabama.” Then, tragedy struck. Their 1977 album, Street Survivors, had been out for just a week and the band two days into a major tour when their chartered aircraft ran out of fuel and crashed in Mississippi, killing Van Zant, a brilliant guitarist Steve Gaines and his sister Cassie, a backing singer for the band. Their legacy lives on, and their songs ensure their place at Southern Rock’s top table is guaranteed. – Richard Havers
Ozark Mountain Daredevils
A genuine bunch of mountain-dwelling hippies, The Ozark Mountain Daredevils could play anything from folk and bluegrass, to straight-ahead pop and fist-wavers like their regional hit “If You Wanna Get to Heaven” (which of course involves raising a little hell). Their peak-era albums were finely polished in the studio by star English producer Glyn Johns, who encouraged their diversity. As good as it is, their one big hit “Jackie Blue” doesn’t really sum up their sound. You really need to listen to a few tunes to get a feel for what this group was all about. Start with the aforementioned songs, then check out “Standing on the Rock,” “You Made It Right,” and “Chicken Train.” – Brett Milano
ZZ Top
ZZ Top always stood apart musically from the rest of the Southern rock crowd, as a stripped-down blues-rock trio who were never into long jams. They stood apart even more once they got into synthesizers. But the “little ol’ band from Texas” always wore their Southern roots as a badge of honor, including locally-slanted songs like “My Head’s in Mississippi” on the synth albums and the undeniable swing of “La Grange” from Tres Hombres. – Brett Milano
The Black Crowes
Brothers Chris and Rich Robinson picked up the Southern rock banner in the 90s and waved it proudly, revitalizing the genre with an Otis Redding cover (“Hard to Handle”) and a stack of solid albums including the classic Southern Harmony and Musical Companion. In later years they’d make a few personnel shifts and go off in a rootsier, jam-based direction with Luther Dickinson on guitar. – Brett Milano
Potliquor
If ever an album lived up to its title, it was Louisiana Rock ‘n Roll, the third and best album from this Baton Rouge band in 1973. They seemed to have it all, including a raunchy guitar sound, a Jerry Lee-style piano pounder, a few touches of deep soul, and some ace covers. (Their “Born Under a Bad Sign” arguably beats Cream’s). But despite relentless touring and a few more good albums, they never quite broke out nationally and split at decade’s end. – Brett Milano
Hank Williams Jr.
Most of the major Southern rockers nodded toward country music; Hank Jr. was the first major country figure to nod back, tearing down a lot of country/rock boundaries in the process. 1975’s Hank Williams Jr. and Friends was his breakthrough, fusing the spirit of his father’s music with the electricity and rebel spirit of Southern rock (and some of the players as well, including Toy Caldwell from Marshall Tucker and Chuck Leavell from the Allmans). He’d celebrate his kinship with the rock outlaws a couple of years later in his defining song, “Family Tradition.” – Brett Milano
Michelle Malone
If Southern rock had been a little more fashionable in the early 90s, this Georgia native could have been the genre’s first female superstar. Her one major-label album, Relentless, showed her as a gutsy singer with boundless energy; around that time she teamed with an all-star cast (three Heartbreakers and two Georgia Satellites) for “U.S. Blues,” the hardest-rocking track on the tribute album Deadicated: A Tribute to the Grateful Dead. She’s remained productive as an indie artist, occasionally turning up with her friends in the Indigo Girls. – Brett Milano
Molly Hatchet
If one lyric line can sum up the greatness of Southern rock, a sure contender would be “Flirtin’ with disaster, y’all/Damn sure you know what I mean!’ Anthemic songs like that one and “Beatin’ the Odds” were their stock in trade, featuring gritty vocals from Danny Joe Brown and, later, Jimmy Farrar. Flying the flag for the genre, the group paid tribute to fellow travelers Skynyrd and Allmans on their live album Double Trouble. – Brett Milano
Black Oak Arkansas
Arguably the wildest of the lot, Black Oak Arkansas featured three shredders who played lead guitar all the time and a raving maniac of a frontman in Jim Dandy Mangrum, with his unearthly croak of a singing voice. The lyrics were equally steeped in whacked-out spirituality and a “back to the earth” ethos which included plenty of free love. Hit singles seemed highly unlikely until some genius at Atlantic came up with the idea of covering LaVern Baker’s R&B classic “Jim Dandy,” and damned if they didn’t match the original. – Brett Milano
Atlanta Rhythm Section
Evolved out of another hitmaking band, Classics IV of “Spooky” and “Traces” fame. So even after they shifted gears, they knew their way around a hit single, and the most memorable Atlanta Rhythm Section songs – “Imaginary Lover,” “So Into You,” and the witty “Not Gonna Let It Bother Me Tonight” – all maintained a radio-friendly, blue-eyed soul groove. Coming full circle, they closed out their hit streak with a remake of the Classics IV’s first biggie, “Spooky.” – Brett Milano
Drive-By Truckers
The Drive-By Truckers hit the national radar with Southern Rock Opera, a double album that took the Lynyrd Skynyrd story as a jumping-off point for deeper thoughts on rock and Southern-ness, along with some great guitar solos. Leaders Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley have since guided the band through a few lineups, losing some key members (including Jason Isbell and his then-wife Shonna Tucker), but always coming back strong. Their songwriting is invariably sharp and topical, and sometimes downbeat, with two albums taking the pandemic head-on. – Brett Milano
Jason Isbell
Once upon a time, Jason Isbell was the young gunslinger in the Drive-By Truckers. After enduring some hard years and turning his life around, he’s now one of alt-country’s flagship artists. As a songwriter, he can do it all, wrapping the toughest of life issues into a few succinct verses, then giving you reasons to celebrate love and survival. – Brett Milano
Rossington-Collins Band
A Lynyrd Skynyrd fix was hard to come by in the dark days after the crash, but the Rossington-Collins Band was the first to rise from the ashes, with four Skynyrds in the lineup. Their 1980 radio hit “Don’t Misunderstand Me” sounded almost like something Skynyrd could have done, but the funkier groove and male/female vocal tradeoffs both added fresh touches. The band ended after two albums when its members relaunched the Skynyrd mothership. – Brett Milano
Blackberry Smoke
A modern band steeped in Southern rock traditions, Atlanta’s Blackberry Smoke have played and recorded with many of their role models including ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons and Wet Willie’s Jimmy Hall. They’ve got a few sensitive country songs in their set, but the rowdy stomping numbers are their real calling card. When you hear their hit “Live It Down” (as in, “Let’s live it up till we can’t….”), you’ll wonder why nobody ever thought of that one before. – Brett Milano
The Kentucky Headhunters
Good taste in cover tunes has been a requisite for any great Southern band, ever since the Allmans borrowed “Stateboro Blues” from Blind Willie McTell. But the Headhunters outdo them all, making first-class barroom raveups out of “The Ballad of Davy Crockett,” “Spirit in the Sky,” and Roger Miller’s high-spirited “Chug-a-Lug.” Their originals are no slouches either, especially on the essential Meet Me in Bluesland album with the great Chuck Berry pianist Johnnie Johnson. – Brett Milano
The Wild Feathers
Part of a new generation of Southern bands, Georgia’s Wild Feathers have absorbed a lot of what came before, taking in everything from Tom Petty’s craftsmanship to the Eagles’ harmonies to the Black Crowes’ guitar attack. Having three singer/writers in the lineup allows them to switch gears with ease, and to pull off some grabbing harmonies. – Brett Milano
The Marshall Tucker Band
The Tucker boys had more jazz in them than most of the classic-era Southern bands, being the only one to feature a flute player – which gave a Tull-ish touch to their first radio hit, “Take the Highway” – plus a drummer (Paul Riddle) who specialized in swing. They also had two lead singers with entirely different styles; Doug Gray took the more lyrical tunes and main writer/guitarist Toy Caldwell did the harder, bluesier ones. They were respectively featured on “Heard It in a Love Song” and “Can’t You See,” two classics that sound nothing like each other. – Brett Milano
Creedence Clearwater Revival
No, Creedence weren’t from the South, or even southern California. But Bay Area native John Fogerty’s imagination sure lived in Louisiana and Mississippi, and the landmark Creedence songs “Green River,” “Proud Mary,” and “Born on the Bayou” all caught the romance and the spirit of the region. Even his guitar sound was distinctively swampy. He’d attribute all this to his childhood love of Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis. Elvis himself was one of the many who wound up covering “Proud Mary,” as did New Orleans maestro Allen Toussaint who cut a 2000’s version with Fogerty. – Brett Milano
38 Special
Any band fronted by Donnie Van Zant, Ronnie Van Zant’s younger brother, is automatically Southern rock royalty. But 38 Special also earn their place on this list with a streak of hit singles that ran all through the 80s, beginning with the infectious fist-waver “Rockin’ Into the Night,” From there they flirted successfully with more mainstream rock, touring with Bon Jovi and scoring again with the Bryan Adams-penned rocker “Teacher, Teacher.” They closed out the decade with “Second Chance” which became their greatest hit, even if its sound was closer to the Police’s “Every Breath You Take” than anything Southern rock. – Brett Milano
Dash Rip Rock
Singer/guitarist Bill Davis has driven this Louisiana band down plenty of road in the past 30 years, taking in punk, rockabilly, power pop, and country; but always with a raw and raucous Southern feel. (Early drummer Fred LeBlanc later formed another well-liked Louisiana band, Cowboy Mouth). Dash’s good-natured sendup “Let’s Go Smoke Some Pot” made national waves in the 90s, but they’ve got plenty of tougher and swampier songs as well, even a few jangly and lyrical ones. On any given night they’ll get you dancing to all of it. – Brett Milano
Dickey Betts
The world remembers Dickey Betts as the guitarist who swapped licks with Duane Allman, then largely became the Allmans’ lead guitarist and focal point in the post-Duane years. But he also has a claim as one of the finest songwriters in Southern rock, giving the band its signature tune in “Ramblin’ Man” as well as its cornerstone instrumentals “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed” and “Jessica.” Outside the group, he first explored country on the Highway Call album, then returned to rock with his band Great Southern. – Brett Milano
Lucinda Williams
There’s always been a thin line between Southern rock and alternative country, and Lucinda Williams has enough rock in her soul to fit into either category. One of the more eloquent songwriters around, she can be thrilling when she rocks out; and there’s good reason why “Changed the Locks” (from her self-titled breakthrough album) became a bar-band standard. Her most outright rock album, Little Honey, includes some of her most joyful music; AC/DC cover and all. – Brett Milano
Source & Credits: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/stories/so-just-what-is-southern-rock/